Monday, January 21, 2019

Union Minister Giriraj Singh on Saturday said, “China and Singapore
have not to face the hurdle for the development because they don’t have to deal
with the agitation like Jantar-Mantar. The state minister MSME, Giriraj Singh,
said this statement in Gndhi Nagar during Vibrant Gujarat Summit.

Mr Prasun Mukherjee,the vice chairman of Singapore Indian
Chamber of Commerce and Industries, before the speech of Giriraj Singh in
summit, said, “in spite of being small country, Singapore has achieve a grand
economic development.”

Minister Girira Singh moved to stage exactly after Prasun’s
speech, said, “Mukherjee was talking about the GDP of Singapore. I muttered
myself, --Mukherjee Sahib, Singapore possesses no Delhi…and no Jantar Mantar --
where do the people make their gathering to protest there the Government
policies.”

He added, “China also has no Jantar Mantar, so it does not face
the hurdle of development.”

Jantar Mantar is place near
parliament in New Delhi where do the people stage their protest and this place
is seen a spot of protest under democratic way in the country.

Whether the opposition is the
pawn of corporate rivalry: Nirmala Sita Raman

The
Defence Minister Nirmla Sita Raman has said on Saturday alleging the opposition
making false propaganda against Rafale deal whether the opposition is the pawn
under corporate rivalry. She targeted the opposition to defuse the efforts to
buy 36 fighter jets.

India’s
strategic interest in the reference of Rafale deal, Sitaraman said targeting on
opposition in a symposium, “whether India’s interest is at top of your agenda
or you are going to be the part of a corporate rivalry anyhow? Whether your
intention is to fail this purchase – if this intention is to pause this
purchase, it is not in national interest!”

The defence minister said that we
cannot be the pawn of corporate to be stubborn over the government constantly,
to make false propaganda among or misinformation to the people. She said,
“since the Modi government came in power, the middlemen have been barred from
the entry of defence ministry.’

In the deal of Rafale fighter
jets, the purchase of each jet has increased about 41.42% than its earlier
rate. A news paper published this report has been the cause of new contention
between the government and the opposition.

Sunday, January 20, 2019

Despite being the world’s
fastest-growing major economy, India’s employment rate declined from 43.5% in
January 2016 to 40.6% in March 2018, a recent report by the credit ratings
agency CARE states.

The growth rate has tapered. In
financial year 2018, for instance, employment grew at a mere 3.8%, compared
with 4.2% in the previous fiscal. India’s unemployment rate shot up to 7.4 per
cent in December 2018. This is the highest unemployment rate we’ve seen in 15
months.

The rate has increased sharply from
the 6.6 per cent clocked in November. The climb to 7.4 per cent also indicates
that the small fall in the unemployment rate seen in November was possibly an
aberration in a trend that indicates a steady increase in the unemployment
rate. The 30-day moving average of the unemployment rate had climbed up much
ahead by January 6 2018, to 7.8 per cent. The count of unemployed has been
increasing steadily.

Over the year ended December 2018, it
increased by a substantial 11 million. Correspondingly, the count of the employed
is declining. In December 2018, an estimated 397 million were employed. This is
nearly 11 million less than the employment estimate for December 2017.This is a
very large fall in employment. Note that the sample of December 2018 is broadly
the same as the sample of December 2017.

Therefore, the difference in
employment is not because of a difference in the sample. In terms of employment
prospects, beneficiaries of the 10 per cent reservation for economically weaker
sections in the general category, which was passed in Parliament last week,
will face a steadily shrinking jobs pool in the central government, Central
Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs) and even banks, official figures show.

The latest data compiled by the
Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) on recruitment over the last three
years through the main agencies — Union Public Service Commission (UPSC), Staff
Selection Commission (SSC), Railway Recruitment Board (RRB) — show a declining
trend in selection and recruitment, from 1,13,524 cumulatively in FY2015 to
1,00,933 in FY2017.Separate data from the Ministry of Heavy Industries and
Public Enterprises show that the number of employees in CPSEs declined from
16.91 lakh in FY2014 to 15.23 lakh in FY2017. But for a small increase in FY2017,
there is a steady decline in the numbers over the last fouryears.

TABLE-1 RECRUITMENT THROUGH UPSC, SSC, RRB/RRC IN LAST
THREE YEARS

YEAR

NUMBER OF UPSC

CANDIDATES

NUMBER OF SSC

CANDIDATES

NUMBER OF RRRB/RRCs

CANDIDATES

TOTAL

2014-15

8,272

58,066

47,186

1,13,524

2015-16

6,866

25,138

79,803

1,11,807

2016-17

5,735

68,880

26,318

1,00,933

SOURCE-DoPT

TABLE-2 NUMBER OF PERSONNEL EMPLOYED IN CENTRAL PUBLIC SECTOR
ENTERPRISES (CPSEs)

YEARS

NUMBER OF EMPLOYEES(IN LAKH)

2013-14

16.91

2014-15

15.87

2015-16

15.21

2016-17

15.23

SOURCE-MINISTRY OF HEAVY INDUSTRIES AND
PUBLIC ENTERPRISES TABLE-3 GROUPWISE DISTRIBUTION OF EMPLOYEES IN BANKING
SECTOR

YEAR

OFFICERS

CLERKS

SUBORDINATES

2014-15

7,29,964

3,76,608

1,84,970

2015-16

7,71,064

3,61,531

1,68,339

2016-17

8,28,594

3,60,381

1,60,916

SOURCE-
COMMERCIAL BANK RETURNS

However, if the number of contractual
and casual workers were to be excluded the number of those employed by CPSEs
was 11.31 lakh in FY2017 compared to 11.85 lakh in FY2016, a reduction in
employee strength by 4.60 per cent.

The government does not maintain a
centralised database on jobs created or employees retired. In the case of
banks, RBI data show that while the total employment has increased by about 4.5
per cent, the hike was on account of the hiring of officers. Recruitment in the
two other job categories namely, clerks and subordinate staff has gone down
nearly 8 per cent between FY2015 and FY2017.

WHY PRIVATE SECTORS ARE NOT PRODUCING ENOUGH JOBS

A report from rating agency CARE,
released in October 2018, revealed that India's employment scenario is not
looking good. It said job growth in corporate India moderated to 3.8 % in
fiscal year 2018, from 4.2 % in the previous fiscal and the problem is most
severe with smaller companies.

The report, based on an analysis of
over 1,600 corporates, said smaller companies with net sales of less than Rs.
500 crore have witnessed a contraction in employment growth, while larger
companies with over Rs 500 crore sales had a positive employment growth in
2017-18.

This comes on the heels of GDP growth
projections, both by global and domestic agencies, placing India at the top of
the world growth chart and is giving us Goosebumps with the thought that once
again India is set to beat China on growth rate. But the fact is GDP figures do
not make much sense to the common man if there aren’t enough jobs to go around.

The problem is going to multiply
manifold if the jobs are not generated with sufficient pace in smaller
companies, as the CARE survey says because that's where the majority in the
economy of 1.3 billion people are employed. The CARE figures confirm the fears
of a jobless growth in the economy, which is a political setback for Narendra
Modi who is set to seek the public's mandate in less than four months from now.

A decline in the job numbers would
also give room to multiple questions--What happened to the famed start-up
promotion our PM has been advocating from Day One, the Skill India campaign
that intended to generate jobs, the numerous calls to foreign investors to put
more money on the table on stalled projects to revive the economic momentum.
The private investment scenario too doesn't look good.

Recently, economy monitoring agency,
CMIE, said private sector investments continue to remain low. Logically, this
has had an adverse impact on stalled projects, which according to CMIE is on
the rise. Its data says Indian companies announced new projects worth Rs 1.49
lakh crore in the quarter ended September 2018, down 41% from the previous
quarter, and 12% lower than in the same period last year.

If one looks deeper at the numbers,
the problem is mainly in the private sector, which is refusing to put fresh
money on the table. That is the root of unemployment because unless fresh money
comes to the economy, the question of new jobs doesn’t have much relevance.

The fact is new projects aren’t
taking place because investors aren’t too optimistic about the economic
scenario on the ground. Crucial land, labour reforms are pending even now. The
current situation, in a way, is reminiscent of UPA’s period of ‘jobless growth’
characterized by a phase of high GDP growth, but with no corresponding job
creation on the ground. Critics pointed out then that unless the fruits of high
economic growth reach the job seeker, the whole growth-talk is a farce.

The displeasure on the ground on account of
lack of jobs is a nightmare to any incumbent who is seeking a public mandate to
return to office. Acknowledging the job problem is important, as one of Modi’s
ministers did recently in the context of agitations in Maharashtra. But, many
of the top ministers at the Centre continue to downplay the problem often
picking up convenient data points that aren’t widely accepted. If not properly
addressed, for a large economy like India, the dissent on theground on rising unemployment can be
unsettling. The tag of the world’s largest growing major economy may not be
enough to calm jobseekers.

Thursday, January 17, 2019

The slapped 8 charges on, Dr Nishith Rai, former
VC DSMNRU Lucknow, have been found correct. The ongoing inquiry report against
Prof. Rai has been submitted in a meeting held under the chairmanship of
CM, Yogi Aditya Nath.

Giving a copy
of this report to Prof Nishith Rai he has been asked to put his explanation till January 23.

The general
council shall take its final decision after the reply and shall send its recommendation to the Chancellor and Governor of the state.

The removed VC
of Rehabilitation University, Pro Rai, was contemplated with the serious
charges; namely, holding two posts, tampering in his date of birth, malpractices
in the teachers appointments and in the research work admission and filing of
the forged documents in the court.

Removing him from the post in this
connection an inquiry last year in February had been set up under the
committee headed by retired Justice Shailendra Saxena.

The committee
investigated the matter and taken the information on the record over the
charges from Prof. Rai.

The inquiry report was put up before the the General Council on Wednesday. Mr Praveer Kumar, secretary and VC, has told here that the council has been apprised that the charges framed over Prof. Rai have been found proved.

The council
has directed to give a chance of one week to Prof. Rai to explain his side in
this connection.

The general council shall hold a meeting in this regard abiding
one week time. The Recommendations after the decision taken shall be sent to
the Governor. Prof. Rai’s tenure is going to end on 27th January this year.

The new PhD ordinance and the affiliation rule for the
University were put up before the council meeting. However there was no
discussion in detail on this issue. The members were assigned the copy and said
that if they are to advice on the tabled matter, they can put their views;
while it is to put in the next meeting again.

The framed charges are:

Lien on two posts or simultaneous working on the vice chancellor
and the Director of Urban Development Centre Lucknow University.

The foul played in the appointments and formed selection
committee arbitrarily

Sri Rajput Karni Sena Uttar Pradesh staged a protest against Samajwadi
Party Spokesperson Sunil Sajan in front of Samajwadi Party Office at Lucknow on Monday this week.

The people in a crowd were protesting and chanting slogans against
Sunil Sajan, spokesperson of Samjwadi Party and they were demanding from the
party president to intervene in this matter and to express his regret by
removing Mr. Sunil Sajan from the important post immediately.

It is noticeable, Mr. Sunil Yadav Sajan on 9th of January had spoken
during a debate on a news channel about Rajputa: ‘Angrezon Ka Ghulam.’

Mr. Aditya Vikram Sahi, State Secretary of this Organization, said,
‘this is insulting that Mr. Sajan told Rajputas were the slave of the English.’

It is not only insulting, but also spreading enmity and disintegrity
among the unity of society, he alleged, which we cannot tolerate from any
person, any social organization or any political parties. The statement of
Sunil Sajan is not only stemming up resentment among the youth, but also is a
show off downgrade thinking. It also proves that the historical Knowledge of
spokesperson is idle. Despite the lack of Knowledge in history, such filthy
and venomous thinking cannot be dubbed appropriate to discourse before the
society.

He added that the spokesperson has not yet apologies even in spite of
being protested through the different mediums of the society on this dirty
statement, and nor Samajwadi party has yet taken any action against this spokes
person who tried to create a nuisance of social harmony.

Monday, January 14, 2019

Targeting the BJP, Mr. Ghulam Nabi Azad, the National General Secretary of Indian National Congress, has said that the Prime Minister of our country, Sri Narendra Modi Ji, has been posing the question since the election of 2014 till now that the Congress had done nothing in the past 70 years when his government is to go. He was addressing

in a press conference held in Lucknow at Neharu Bhawan UPCC Sunday this week.

None can forget the services of Nehru and Gandhi's works for the country. Everyone of the country understands it that the Congress since the
freedom fighting and post independence has taken the decision and worked for
the country.

He said, “we begin with the farmers: here we say the congress has
been not only fighting for the farmers from pre independence, but also
continues for the post independence. He recalls the agitation of Champaran
under the leadership of Mahatma Gandhi; Green Revolution under the leadership
of Indira Gandhi, which was unveiled by Pt Nehru.”

The Zamindari abolition is a big post independence work by Pt
Nehru. Pt Nehru, by Zamindari abolition, striping the lands from the rich and
Nawabs, allocated to the poor working peasants who might have been of any caste
and creeds. Later he had constructed the dams for the purpose of irrigation,
which helped the production of electricity in the country.

The food grain shortage was at high when the country got
independence; today the farmers are feeding whole India and exporting some of its
part to other countries, he said.

We have brought the bill of land acquisition in the favour of
farmers, which provides them the rights to sell land on their own will
and are being paid 4 times cost if their land are acquired by the
government.

He said Rahul Gandhi is the only leader who is the voice of
farmers today; he has been constantly working for the rise of farmers. Recently Rahul
Gandhi had promised with the farmers, which we have fulfilled? We have waived
the loans of farmers in the states where the congress led government is in
power. We are not like BJP. BJP and Modi what had assured to the farmers
that they would waive the loans of farmers; would give them Rs15 lakh in each account; would bring
back the black money, did nothing. This is the difference between the BJP and
the Congress.

We have made a provision of 50%reservation in the district board
Panchayat for the women empowerment in place of 33% reservation.

Mr Azad said in his reply of a question to media, we hadn’t said
any statement about the Grand Alliance; it has been stemmed up by the media. We
had talked about the alliance; the fight in fray is only between the Congress
and the BJP – who desire to defeat the BJP are welcomed in our alliance, but there
is no pressure. Many parties are to join; the parties are able to know whose
interest are how much to defeat the BJP? Congress negotiation is going on in
many states – at the end of this month, our alliance shall be cleared about: 'which
parties are with the Congress?'

He said other parties leaders to achieve their political mileage
used to talk about the Bofors; then came 3 times PM Atal Bihari Bajpai Ji; now
the PM Modi Ji – mere all they confused the public; none was able to give a result
of corruption against Congress party since then till now.

He added that the party workers are pleased to hear that the
congress is going to fight on 80 seats; none is in despair.

The present survey report says that the unemployment rate in India
is 3.52% while it was 3.42% in the year 2014.Buntline correspondent asked:

Whether the Congress shall provide the employment 1 crore during
its future 5 years tenure if it comes in power?

He replied this question, "Our manifesto includes the
provision, for the farmers, for the MSME, for the employment, for ending
unemployment, for the government employees, for the security of women and if we
come in power at the centre, we will waive the loans of all the farmers."

Saturday, January 12, 2019

A man, 55, resident of Rajaji Puram C-block, fell into a
roadside ditch which was dug for the pillar erection on Talkatora road Lucknow
on Friday evening this week.

Mr Anuj Srivastav, when he was going on Talkatora Road, near
Millarea police outpost he could not assess a ditch ahead for the pillar that
is to be erected for the flyover bridge from old Haiderganj upto Balajimandir,
and he plunged into it where he sustained a serious injury.

The eyewitness who helped him to drag out from the depth told
the correspondent that the man was inebriated condition; suddenly he could not
control the bike and barged into the pit.

He was rushed to the nearby Avtar hospital where he got first
aid assistance, and then his kin carried him somewhere else.

Wednesday, January 09, 2019

Election Commission
secretary Helal Uddin has announced that the Awami League-led coalition has won
288 of the 300 seats. The Jatiya Oikya Front (National Unity Front), a rainbow
alliance led by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party that had called for a silent
revolution in the ballot boxes, has won just seven seats.

The United Nations on
Friday called for an independent and impartial investigation into the December 30,
2018 election in Bangladesh in which Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina won a third
straight term amid accusations of violence and voting irregularities.

Hasina's ruling
alliance won more than 96 percent of the seats contested in Sunday's election,
which was marred by accusations of ballot stuffing, voter intimidation and
violence that killed at least 19 people. Opponents rejected the election result,
but Hasina and her Awami League have denied any impropriety, saying that the
polling was peaceful and there was enthusiastic participation from her
supporters.

SHE HAS MUFFLED MEDIA

While the Opposition
was being wiped out, the Hasina government consolidated its influence and
control on the media. The arrest in August 2018 of photographer Shahidul Alam,
who was detained for posting live videos on face book criticizing the
government’s response to the 2018 road safety protests, was seen as a challenge
to freedom of speech in Bangladesh, with several calls seeking his release.

Alam was later released on bail, but the
incident served to add to Hasina’s image as an authoritarian leader. Such
challenges to her authority have, however, been rare. In the run-up to the
elections, a majority of the television news channels, with Ekattor and Ekushey
TV leading the pack, openly sided with the ruling Awami League. Ekattor TV,
which gets its name from the 1971 Bangladeshi Liberation War (Ekattor is 71 in
Bangla), is vocal about its support to the “liberation war spirit”, a euphemism
for support to the Awami League.

In January 2015,
another channel, Ekushey TV, broadcast live a speech and press conference from
London by Khaleda’s son Tarique. The government responded by cracking down and
arresting its chairman Abdus Salam in an earlier case lodged against the TV
station under anti-pornography laws. Within months, a pro-government business
tycoon, Mohammad Saiful Alam, took over the channel’s ownership. There is only
one channel called NTV, a news channel owned by a BNP leader, has been able to
survive despite being critical of the government, though it has had to tone
down the criticism.

The two top
newspapers, The Daily Star in English and Prothom Alo in Bangla, have, however,
managed to remain firm in their opposition to the Hasina government. This is,
despite Mahfuz Anam, editor of The Daily Star, being slapped with 83 sedition
and defamation cases in 2016. The reporters from this paper were not allowed to
cover the PM’s events for the last few years. In recent months, even Prothom
Alo’s reporters were denied access.

Top advertisers,
including telecom companies and multi-national companies, were asked not to
advertise in the paper and their revenue has fallen by about 30 per cent.

The latest attack on
critics is a bill regulating online publishing and social media, which
parliament approved at the end of September last year. Its draconian provisions
include prison terms of up to 14 years for those who spread “propaganda” about
the war in 1971 in which Bangladesh won independence from Pakistan. (Sheikh
Hasina’s father led the independence movement; she is so vitriolic about his
opponents that she could be accused of propagandising herself.)

Another vague clause bans the posting of
“aggressive or frightening” content. Sheikh Hasina says the bill is necessary
to prevent the spread of radicalism and pornography, but journalists are
terrified.

CHIEF JUSTICE SK SINHA IS A LIVING TESTIMONY OF HER
AUTHORITARIANISM

In her fourth stint
overall, she has combined it with ruthless dominance over the country’s
political landscape, stamping out any hint of opposition and almost decimating
the Awami League’s main rival, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, and
imprisoning its leader Khaleda Zia on a Rs 1.73 crore corruption charge.

Zia was arrested in
February 2018 after being convicted of embezzling money intended for an
orphanage, but the lady Prime Minister of Bangladesh has been acquitted by
court. Bangladesh's High Court quashed a $2 billion corruption case against
Prime Minister, Sheikh Hasina, involvement in the awarding of three offshore
gas fields to Canadian firm Niko Resources.

The court, which began
the final hearing on the Hasina's petition on Wednesday, quashed the 2007 case
involving ofthe awarding three offshore
gas fields to Canadian firm Niko Resources during her first term as prime
minister, according to the Star online.

I shall like to
explain how she works with judiciary with an example which illustrates her
ruthless character to begin with. Hasina’s run-ins with the judiciary are a
glaring example of and a proof of her rising authoritarianism.

While the Hasina government has always denied
the charge, in A Broken Dream, a tell-all memoir, Justice Sinha who now lives
in Canada in exile writes that on October 1, 2017, a day before the court was
to hear an appeal on its impeachment ruling, he was invited to a late-night
meeting where the president, the law minister, the attorney general and Prime
Minister Hasina repeatedly pressed him to rule “in favour of the government”.

“The prime minister
appeared to be blind for retaining power and her only objective was how to
control the Supreme Court for coming to power in the next election. Her
approach was unethical and unconstitutional,” Sinha writes.

RAMPANT HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS

Human rights
organization Amnesty International has warned against a growing crack down by
authorities on peaceful protests and freedom of expression in Bangladesh.

In its annual report,
the international rights body claimed that criticism of the government in
Bangladesh, or the family of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, triggered criminal
cases which were the reflection of an increasingly hostile environment for
freedom of expression.

“The government
proposed a new Digital Security Act, which places even greater restrictions on
freedom of expression than the notoriously abusive Section 57 of the
Information and Communications Technology Act,” the report claims.

“The rights to freedom
of peaceful assembly continued to be severely restricted, as members of the
political opposition were stopped from organizing rallies and meetings. The
activities of NGOs continued to be restricted through the Foreign Donation
(Voluntary Activities) Regulation Act.

Enforced
disappearances persisted, mainly targeting the political opposition and their
supporters,” it adds. Highlighting a case in November 2018, where more than 30
homes belonging to Hindu families were reportedly ransacked, looted and torched
in Thakurpara village in Rangpur, Amnesty flagged Bangladesh alongside other
countries in South Asia where minorities are unsafe.

“South Asia remains
one of the most dangerous regions to be a member of a religious minority.
Muslims in India and Sri Lanka, Shi’as in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and Hindus
in Bangladesh have all come under attack over the past years. In each case, the
governments have failed to protect them, been mute to their fate, or even
encouraged a climate of hostility.

The exodus of nearly
650,000 Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar to neighbouring Bangladesh was branded
the fastest-growing refugee crisis in recent times. “At the end of the year,
their prospects for the future remained very unclear, and the enduring failure
of world leaders to provide real solutions for refugees left little reason for
optimism,” Amnesty warns.

USA in its internal report (2018) says
explicit details of human rights condition. The most significant human rights
issues included: extrajudicial killings, torture, arbitrary or unlawful
detentions, and forced disappearances by the government security forces;
restrictions on civil liberties, including freedom of speech, press, and the
activities of non-governmental organizations (NGOs); a lack of freedom to
participate in the political process; corruption; violence and discrimination
based on gender, religious affiliation, caste, tribe, including indigenous
persons, and sexual orientation and gender identity also persisted and, in
part, due to a lack of accountability. Trafficking in persons remained a
serious problem; as did restrictions on worker’s rights and the worst forms of
child labor.

OPPOSITION POLITICAL PARTY IS DECIMATED

Ruhul Kabir Rizvi, the
BNP’s senior joint secretary general and the man who has emerged as the party’s
face, holding its daily press conferences, has been staying in the BNP’s Naya
Paltan office for the last six months. He has over 20 political cases against
him and he fears he will be arrested if he steps out.

The police and the
district administration’s officials both have been refusing us permission to
hold public rallies and they have no option, but to hold only local-level
meetings in constituencies or go on door-to-door campaigns. Public rallies are
the privileges of ruling elites only. Rizvi also complains that Hasina hasn’t
extended to Zia any of the courtesies due to a three-time prime minister,
keeping her in a dilapidated jail “with rats and cats”.

Zia, 72, is housed in
the 19th Century Dhaka Central Jail, which has been turned into a courtroom to
try the BNP leader and where she is the only inmate. Zia, who suffers from
diabetes and arthritis, is allowed an attendant in jail. Rizvi alleges that
Zia’s access to her family members, brother Shamim Eskander, sister-in-law
Kaniz Fatema, and sister Selina Islam is restricted to fortnightly visits.

“If they allow the
families to meet on Eid, then they cancel the fortnightly meetings. Last Eid,
they did not allow the family to bring her home-cooked food. Hours after the
Election Commission declared her victorious, Hasina, flanked by her advisors, H
T Imam and Gowher Rizvi, admitted Bangladesh was a “nascent democracy” unlike
many other democracies and said, “I can’t accept authoritarian and military
regimes. I am running the country very liberally. But I will not allow
terrorism, drugs and corruption, and I will do my best to save our people from
these ills.” And then, in a room gleaming with chandeliers and golden curtains,
she added, “I am the Prime Minister of the country, of all the people, not just
of a party.” On the lack of an Opposition space, she quipped, “Bengalis love to
talk… there are so many talk shows on TV.”

The UP BJP spokesperson, Hero Bajpai targeted
the former chief minister and SP chief, Mr Akhilesh Yadav, and has quipped why
is being he so jitter?

He added that the BSP chief Mayawati’s preach
to Akhilesh, ‘don’t be distress’, shows that the alliance of corrupts is the
grand alliance of fear, which is a meaningless concept to the public interest.

The Parliament is being paused in which way
including where congress is trying its hands – all they are on bail under the
allegation of economic offence in National Herald case.

The spokesperson has said that if SP chief is
clean, why is he being fearful with the investigation?

Mr Bajpai said that
the BSP and the SP both are accusing BJP in which way for misusing the CBI,
tell us duo that when they had been the supporting puppets of then congress
government in centre for the past 10 years tenure, whether it was apressure of CBI? or this support had been
given by ignoring public interests on account of an incompatible, filthy
opportunist.

This opportunist,
corrupt and filthy alliance has been tied only to remove the developing angel
our Prime Minister, Narendra Modi. A huge wealth accumulated having committed
corruption by the corrupt parties’ leaders on the path of dynasty. The
principle of affirmative consciousness in the politics by Modi ji has grown a
fear among them. In spite of being
maligned of her modesty in the guest house, the Aunt has allied with the
nephew.He said that Akhilesh Yadav and Mayawati Ji both
are appeasing each other and the congress is supporting duo.

He added that actually, SP-BSP and Congress
trio are saving each other on the issue of corruption.

The same old alliance has emerged in a new
shape. He said that the BJP government is working with the determination of
clean mindset and perfect development.